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Who is Killing the Women of Basra?
January 9, 2008 - (MADRE) In Basra, Iraq's second
largest city, 2008 was ushered in with an announcement of the 2007
death toll of women targeted by Islamist militias. City officials
reported on December 31 that 133 women were killed and mutilated
last year, their bodies dumped in trash bins with notes warning
others against "violating Islamic teachings..." But ambulance
drivers who are hired to troll the city streets in the early mornings
to collect the bodies confirm what most residents believe: the actual
numbers are much higher.
The killers' leaflets are not very original. They
usually accuse the women of being prostitutes or adulterers. But
those murdered are more likely to be doctors, professors, or journalists.
We know this because activists from the Organization of Women's
Freedom in Iraq (OWFI) have taken on the gruesome task of visiting
city morgues to try and determine the scale and pattern of the killings.
According to OWFI, most of the women who have been murdered "are
PhD holders, professionals, activists, and office workers."
Their crime is not "promiscuity," but rather opposition
to the transformation of Iraq into an Islamist state. That bloody
transition has been the main political trend under US occupation.
It's no secret who is killing the women of Basra. Shiite political
forces empowered by the US invasion have been terrorizing women
there since 2003. Within weeks of the invasion, these groups established
"Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice" squads,
which many Iraqis refer to simply as "misery gangs." They
began by patrolling the streets, harassing and sometimes beating
women who did not dress or behave to their liking. Coalition forces
did nothing to stop them, and soon the militias escalated their
violence to torturing and assassinating anyone who they saw as an
obstacle to turning Iraq into an Islamist state.
The Culture Card
Despite the clearly political nature of these killings, US media
generally portray violence against Iraqi women as an unfortunate
part of Arab or Muslim "culture." For instance, journalist
Kay S. Hymowitz has catalogued the "inventory of brutality"
committed by men in the "Muslim world," railing against
"the savage fundamentalist Muslim oppression of women."
Hymowitz echoes a commonly held assumption, namely that gender-based
violence, when committed in the Middle East, derives from Islam.
Of course, pinning violence against women on Islam is politically
useful: it helps to dehumanize Muslims and justify US intervention
in their countries. It also deflects attention from the many ways
that US policy has ignored and enabled violence against the women
of Iraq (like championing political leaders with an openly-stated
intent to unravel women's legal rights). But in fact, culture alone
explains very little. All human behavior has cultural dimensions,
but culture is merely a context, not a cause or a useful explanation
for violence, whether in Iraq or anywhere else.
It makes much more sense to examine gender as a
system of power relations whose number one enforcement mechanism
is recourse to violence against women. There is nothing "Muslim"
about that system, except that its Muslim proponents, like their
Jewish, Christian, and Hindu counterparts, use culture and religion
to rationalize women's subjugation.
In fact, shifting the focus from culture to gender reveals a system
of power that is nearly universal. Yanar Mohammed, the founder of
OWFI, describes this year's killings of women in Basra as a campaign
"to restrain women into the domestic domain and end all female
participation in the social and political scene." Compare her
comment to Amnesty International's conclusion about the ongoing
mass killings of women in Guatemala. According to Amnesty, that
wave of violence, "carries with it a perverse message: women
should abandon the public space they have won at much personal and
social effort and shut themselves back up in the private world,
abandoning their essential role in national development." This
certainly captures the intent of Iraq's Islamists, who have little
in common with the killers of women in Guatemala, other than a rigid
adherence to a gendered system of power.
Instead of lamenting the "brutality" of Islam, the US
media should start connecting the dots between the US occupation
and the empowerment of people who use violence against women as
a strategy to pursue their political agenda. We can start with the
fact that the Pentagon has trained, armed, and funded the very militias
that are killing the women of Basra.
From: http://www.madre.org/articles/me/womenbasra010908.html
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